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I bought the Game from a charity shop, and forgot to check for instructions inside.
It is made by City Index (the Originators of Spread betting) and Haggle Limited 1995

2006-11-10 10:45:09 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Games & Recreation Board Games

1 answers

Here is a link to a British person selling one. Perhaps you may be able to buy a photocopy of the rules.
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/andy.merritt/OldCatDec05.htm

2006-11-12 08:57:10 · answer #1 · answered by LudoRex 7 · 1 0

situation 1: The runs do not count, because the batter-runner did not reach first safely. 4.09 Situation 2: The runs count, because this was not a force play. Note: An appeal play can be a force play. But here the force was removed when the batter was retired. The runner was not obligated to vacate his base. Whether he is put out by the defense touching him or the base is irrelevant. EDIT: My rules manual does not mention a difference here between high school and MLB rules. To show that an appeal can be a force: "If a consecutive runner has been forced to advance by reason of the batter becoming a runner, and he is forced at the moment he misses his advance base, an appeal of that base is always a force out."

2016-03-19 06:14:21 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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